Intel aims to boost the performance of netbooks with an upgraded Atom chip and a new Moblin beta 2.0 that includes a new interface for the netbook OS that will go face-to-face against Microsoft Windows.

The current Atom chip setup uses three chips with graphics and the memory controller on their own chip. The updated version called Pineview uses the Pine Trail platform which will only use two chips. A netbook can either its own integrated graphics or work with third-party graphics chips such as Nvidia's Ion. ZDNet UK's Matthew Broersma has more on Intel's
netbook upgrades.

Photo credit: Intel (click on any image to enlarge)

Published: May 20, 2009 -- 10:18 GMT (03:18 PDT)

Caption by: Andy Smith

Intel also launched the beta of version 2.0 of the Linux-based Moblin netbook platform and included a new interface.

Published: May 20, 2009 -- 10:18 GMT (03:18 PDT)

Caption by: Andy Smith

The new M-zone replaces the desktop.

Published: May 20, 2009 -- 10:18 GMT (03:18 PDT)

Caption by: Andy Smith

Here's a timeline for Moblin showing the goals it has already reached.

Gallery: Intel rebuilds netbooks

Intel announced a new Atom chip and Moblin Beta 2.0 in its efforts to grab market share before netbooks reach their prime.

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Intel aims to boost the performance of netbooks with an upgraded Atom chip and a new Moblin beta 2.0 that includes a new interface for the netbook OS that will go face-to-face against Microsoft Windows.

The current Atom chip setup uses three chips with graphics and the memory controller on their own chip. The updated version called Pineview uses the Pine Trail platform which will only use two chips. A netbook can either its own integrated graphics or work with third-party graphics chips such as Nvidia's Ion. ZDNet UK's Matthew Broersma has more on Intel's
netbook upgrades.